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  2. Rico (name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rico_(name)

    Rico is a diminutive of either the Spanish masculine given name Federico or Ricardo, or of the Italian given name Enrico. Rico can also be a nickname or a surname. Rico can also be a nickname or a surname.

  3. Pomeroy (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomeroy_(surname)

    Despite the clearly found words of pomme and roy in the name, meaning "apple" in French and "king" in Old French (French roi), the surname given to Radulphus is not linked with the Old French word roy, but is the common place-name Pommeraye, that means "orchard of apple-trees", Modern French word pommeraie [], from pommier "apple-tree" and old suffix -aye, now -aie, meaning "a collection of ...

  4. Abreu (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abreu_(surname)

    The Abreu coat of arms [1]. Abreu is a Galician-Portuguese surname. [2]The source of the name is debated. The family name has a Portuguese form, and has been explained as being an ancient branch of the house of Normandy [3] [4] via the Countship of Évreux, France.

  5. French name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_name

    Formally, a married or widowed woman can be called by the given name of her husband (madame (given name of husband) family name or madame veuve (given name of husband) family name); this is now slightly out of fashion, except on formal invitation cards (in France, on a formal invitation card, the traditional formula is always a variant of ...

  6. Talk:Corsican immigration to Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Corsican_immigration...

    Thus, the Catalan language was heavily influenced by the language spoken by the Franks. This accounts for the linguistic similarity of many names and words in Catalan to their equivalents in the French language. There is a fine work written by a Mexican scholar tracing the origins of family surnames in the Hispanic world.

  7. Navarro (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navarro_(surname)

    Navarro is a Spanish and French surname. [1] Navarro is a habitational surname denoting someone from Navarre (Basque: Nafarroa) [2] [better source needed] after the Kingdom of Pamplona took on the new naming in the high Middle Ages, while also keeping its original meaning of 'Basque-speaking person' in a broader sense, an ethnic surname. [3]

  8. French immigration to Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_immigration_to...

    Therefore, the decree was printed in three languages: the Spanish language, the English language, and the French language and circulated widely through ports and coastal cities throughout Europe. The French who immigrated to Puerto Rico quickly became part of the Island immigrant communities, which were predominantly Catholic also. They settled ...

  9. Martínez (surname) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martínez_(surname)

    The name Martin became popular throughout Christian Europe after it was borne by a famous 4th-century saint who was active in Roman Gaul (now France), Martin of Tours. Martínez is a widely spread surname (among other European surnames) due in large part to the global influence of the Spanish culture on territories and colonies in the Americas ...